Gardener For Cwg

Athletics: Outdoors Gardener Jan 28 2006

By South Wales Echo

Olympic sprint relay champion Jason Gardener insists his decision to pass up the opportunity to defend his World Indoor 60metres title was not a difficult one.

The 30-year-old will skip the event in Moscow to focus on the Commonwealth Games in Australia in March and claiming his first individual medal in the 100m at an international event.

Gardener is renowned as an indoor specialist and secured his third consecutive European title last year, but his focus is on translating that form into success outdoors at both the Commonwealth Games and European Championships.

He said: ‘It was not hard at all because I have won everything indoors and I have not yet outdoors so that is my desire.’

29 January 2006 15:28 Home > Sport > General
Athletics: Gardener steals early march in pursuit of Commonwealth gold
By Mike Rowbottom
Published: 28 January 2006
Great Britain’s athletes will emerge from winter training in Glasgow today for the first major domestic competition of a busy period culminating in the World Indoor Championships and Commonwealth Games in March. But Jason Gardener, who will be seeking a fifth successive win over 60 metres at the Kelvin Hall venue, which hosts the Norwich Union International, has a better idea than most about his capabilities.

Earlier this month, the Olympic sprint relay gold medallist broke the indoor 100m record and in Moscow on Wednesday - at the venue which will host the World Indoor Championships - he laid down another marker by winning the 60m in 6.60sec.

The two men who followed him home in Moscow, South Africa’s Morne Nagel (6.61sec) and Russia’s Andrei Yepishin (6.65sec), will provide his main opposition in Glasgow, but Gardener is looking beyond this familiar challenge to the Commonwealth Games, where he feels he can translate his outstanding indoor form to success over 100m.

“I believe I’m capable of doing something special in the 100m this year,” he said yesterday. Gardener is likely to be seeking a sub-10 second timing at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne. He has been in that territory before, but not in the last eight years.

The Glasgow meeting will also prove an important early-season guide for anther of Britain’s Olympic medallists, Kelly Sotherton. The 2004 heptathlon bronze medallist will compete in the 60m hurdles and the long jump, although, unfortunately for the British team, she will not be accompanied in the latter event by Jade Johnson. The European silver medallist has a recurrence of the back problem which forced her to abandon competition midway through last year’s Glasgow meeting.

The Commonwealth long jump champion Nathan Morgan has chosen not to defend his title in Melbourne but to seek instead a first medal at the World Indoor Championships, which take place less than a fortnight earlier. He will open his indoor campaign against world indoor bronze medallist Vitaly Shkurlatov.

Morgan will be anxious to prove that he has put two injury-troubled years behind him. The same applies to Mozambique’s multiple 800m world champion, Maria Mutola. “The Glasgow race will tell me a lot about what shape I’m in,” said the 33-year-old former Olympic champion.

Great Britain’s athletes will emerge from winter training in Glasgow today for the first major domestic competition of a busy period culminating in the World Indoor Championships and Commonwealth Games in March. But Jason Gardener, who will be seeking a fifth successive win over 60 metres at the Kelvin Hall venue, which hosts the Norwich Union International, has a better idea than most about his capabilities.

Earlier this month, the Olympic sprint relay gold medallist broke the indoor 100m record and in Moscow on Wednesday - at the venue which will host the World Indoor Championships - he laid down another marker by winning the 60m in 6.60sec.

The two men who followed him home in Moscow, South Africa’s Morne Nagel (6.61sec) and Russia’s Andrei Yepishin (6.65sec), will provide his main opposition in Glasgow, but Gardener is looking beyond this familiar challenge to the Commonwealth Games, where he feels he can translate his outstanding indoor form to success over 100m.

“I believe I’m capable of doing something special in the 100m this year,” he said yesterday. Gardener is likely to be seeking a sub-10 second timing at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne. He has been in that territory before, but not in the last eight years.
The Glasgow meeting will also prove an important early-season guide for anther of Britain’s Olympic medallists, Kelly Sotherton. The 2004 heptathlon bronze medallist will compete in the 60m hurdles and the long jump, although, unfortunately for the British team, she will not be accompanied in the latter event by Jade Johnson. The European silver medallist has a recurrence of the back problem which forced her to abandon competition midway through last year’s Glasgow meeting.

The Commonwealth long jump champion Nathan Morgan has chosen not to defend his title in Melbourne but to seek instead a first medal at the World Indoor Championships, which take place less than a fortnight earlier. He will open his indoor campaign against world indoor bronze medallist Vitaly Shkurlatov.

Morgan will be anxious to prove that he has put two injury-troubled years behind him. The same applies to Mozambique’s multiple 800m world champion, Maria Mutola. “The Glasgow race will tell me a lot about what shape I’m in,” said the 33-year-old former Olympic champion.